SHARE
COPY LINK

LA BELLE VIE

La Belle Vie: Places to visit in Paris this summer and the official ‘French values’

From what to expect when visiting France this summer to why the Mona Lisa is famous and how foreigners would change France, this week's La Belle Vie newsletter offers you an essential starting point for eating, talking, drinking and living like a French person.

La Belle Vie: Places to visit in Paris this summer and the official 'French values'
A wooden flag with the national motto of France - Liberty, Equality, Fraternity (Liberte, Egalite, Fraternite) and the national colours is seen in the town of Entraygues-sur-Truyère, south-central France, on August 7, 2018. (Photo by PASCAL PAVANI / AFP)

La Belle Vie is our regular look at the real culture of France – from language to cuisine, manners to films. This newsletter is published weekly and you can receive it directly to your inbox, by going to your newsletter preferences in “My account”.

If you have spent any time with Parisians in the last several months (years, even), then you may have noticed an air of apprehension about the Olympic Games. Any time I ask Parisian if they’ll be in the city during the Olympics, I’m met with either a relieved “Thank goodness I’ll be in the countryside” or a frustrated “Yes, I’ll be stuck here”.

My theory is that people will start getting excited once the Games begin. After all, my skeptical neighbours were all outside joyfully watching the Olympic Torch relay go through our neighbourhood. 

But the nervous sentiment has trickled over to discussions about visiting France in general. It is true that Paris will be crowded – we are expecting around five million more visitors during the Games than in an average summer – but I don’t agree with the notion that the entire country is better avoided. Paris is not France.

Should I avoid France this summer because of the Olympics?

If you are coming to Paris this summer, either as a sports-lover or a regular tourist, then be aware that city will be transformed for the Olympic Games.

Security zones will be put in place around Games venues, and the area immediately surrounding the river Seine will be blocked off ahead and only accessible with a QR code in the lead-up to the opening ceremony. 

While the usual landmarks and museums will mostly remain open (though with some adaptations, such altered operating hours and obligatory advanced reservations), this is a great opportunity to test out some of the lesser-known museums.

5 lesser-known museums in Paris to visit this summer

I promise I’m not recommending these museums solely because I think the Mona Lisa is a bit overrated, though that may be changing as the Louvre prepares to give the painting its own room to improve visitors’ experiences. I genuinely think that Paris has a lot to offer off-the-beaten track. 

If you decide to visit Mona, or La Jaconde as she is known in France, you might be curious why she is in France in the first place, considering both the painter and subject are Italian.

Why is the Mona Lisa so famous (and why is it even in France)?

Recently, the French government passed an immigration law that created a new obligation for foreigners requesting residency cards to sign a contract promising to ‘respect French values’. Nothing was said about the primacy of French cheese, wine or other gastronomy, nor was there any mention of the crucial two-hour lunch-break and statutory five weeks of holiday per year.

There was a line about respecting France’s national anthem, the Marseillaise

The ‘French values’ that foreign residents must respect

Most of the values we foreigners must respect seem pretty doable in my opinion (I can’t argue with the line about ‘refraining from sexist attitudes’).

As for the things that foreigners would change about France, we recently asked our readers if there is anything they would alter about this country if they had unlimited power. 

Banning insects to abolishing ‘le’ and ‘la’ – The changes that readers would make to France

Aside from the official values France expects you to hold, there are a few other ways you might find yourself becoming more French over time.

From being prepared for strikes to attitudes about bread and wine, Norwegian writer Ingri Bergo lays out nine ways foreigners might be ‘Frenchified’.

Nine signs that you are becoming French

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.

LA BELLE VIE

La Belle Vie: French pastries, the Paris Olympic legacy and Brigitte Macron’s TV role

From the evolution of French pastries to afternoon snacks, via the future for the Paris Olympics monuments and Brigitte Macron's new TV career, this week's La Belle Vie newsletter offers you an essential starting point for eating, talking, drinking and living like a French person.

La Belle Vie: French pastries, the Paris Olympic legacy and Brigitte Macron's TV role

One of my favourite parts of this summer’s Olympic and Paralympic Games was the way they brought out the friendly, welcoming side of Paris. The Games also gave us several new landmarks across the city, from the rings on the Eiffel Tower to the hot-air balloon in the Tuileries Gardens.

Now, the Olympics and Paralympics are over, but some of those monuments may be sticking around.

Rings, hot-air balloon and horse: What now for Paris Olympic landmarks?

Recently, The Local received an email from a reader asking us if French bread and pastries are getting worse. While it is true that frozen products account for almost a quarter of pastries and other sweet goods sold in France, taste is in the eye of the beholder.

We decided to get a better idea of the bread/pastry situation in France, so we ran a survey asking whether other readers in France found this to be true. Here’s what they had to say.

‘Tastes like straw’ – Are French bread and croissants really getting worse?

For me, it really comes down to trial and error. You have to make it your mission to test out all of the boulangeries in your area. I am certain that with enough time, effort and sampling, you will find the delicious, homemade bread and pastries you were looking for. 

The only downside is that the best places tend to be popular with locals and have often sold out of fresh pastries by mid-morning, so you might have to become an early-riser.

Pâtisseries are very important to French people – so much so that the average French household spends €350 a year on them. 

5 things to know about French pâtisserie

Pastries may have fruit on top – like my favourite, the tarte aux fraises – but I’m not sure they count toward the recommended daily intake of fruit and veg.

France’s public health agency, Santé Publique France (SPF), issued a range of healthy eating recommendations for parents of children aged between four and 11.

Interestingly, one of their top recommendations was not about what children eat, but how they eat. They encouraged families to eat together at the dinner table, avoid screens at mealtimes, and when possible, cook together.

Fruit, chocolate and meals at the table: What French doctors say children should eat

For families with children, a large chunk of that pâtisserie budget might go toward afternoon snacks – the goûter.

SPF did have something to say about this – they encouraged families to “limit the daily intake of viennoiseries such as croissants and pains au chocolat” [chocolatines, if you’re reading from southwest France].

This might be easier said than done, however. The goûter is a very important tradition for children in France, and the expectation is that snacks will involve a healthy dose of sugar.

Le goûter: The importance of the afternoon snack in France

And finally, last week, I mentioned that Emily in Paris is back with another season.

I have to admit that I have been avoiding the new episodes, but I was tempted to turn on Netflix when I heard France’s First Lady, Brigitte Macron will make a cameo this season.

Apparently, Mme Macron “has great talent!”

France’s first lady makes cameo in new Emily in Paris episode

SHOW COMMENTS